“That’s an idea, there’s definitely something in bringing it back. It would be interesting to do a TV show.

"There’s quite a few of us still alive and we’ve all got to a certain age but we do all look good. You could get away with it.

“There’s been a film suggested – I’ve still got the script someone wrote which was loosely based on lots of episodes.

“And someone approached me at a party and said he’d really like to work on a musical.”

RETURN: Allo Allo could be the next in a string of classic revivals (Image: DAILY STAR /HUMPHREY NEMAR)

The cast are all meeting up next month for the unveiling of a blue plaque at Lynford Hall, Norfolk, where some of the exterior scenes were shot.

And Vicki, 68, adds: “I bet, when I talk to the others, they will say they have been approached about doing it.”

But Vicki would want any remake to stay true to the spirit of the original rather than a dull politically-correct version.

Set in occupied France, ‘Allo ‘Allo followed the misadventures of philandering cafe owner Rene Artois (Gorden Kaye) and his long-suffering wife Edith (Carmen Silvera) who tried to keep on the right side of both the French Resistance and the German military.

Long-running jokes included the whereabouts of The Fallen Madonna With The Big Boobies, English policeman Crabtree’s inability to speak French (“I was p**sing by the door when I heard two shats”), Rene’s attempts to avoid being caught in compromising situations with his waitresses, Madame Fanny’s flashing bed knobs used to communicate with London and the seemingly-gay German Lieutenant Gruber (Guy Siner) and his attempts to flirt with Rene.

Vicki says: “We sent up everyone – the Germans were kinky, the French were randy and the British were stupid. If we were going to do it, I’d rather have it as it was, do it in a totally non-PC way.”

In fact Vicki believes Britain is crying out for some proper comedy these days.

“I think we need to laugh more,” she says. “When you get in from work, it’s news, cooking shows, animal shows – where’s the comedy?

“You have to be so PC with things these days. But I think it would be great to get that laugh-out-loud comedy back.

SAUCY: Vicki in her Allo Allo days (Image: NC)

"That’s why comedians are packing out 2,000 seater theatres, because people want to laugh.”

Sadly ‘Allo ‘Allo writers David Croft and Jeremy Lloyd are both dead, as are Gorden Kaye and Carmen Silvera.

But Vicki believes there could be some lost scripts or unfinished episodes which could form the basis for a remake.“They found old episodes of Dad’s Army,” says Vicki.

And I thought: ‘Aren’t there any old episodes of ‘Allo ‘Allo we didn’t do?’ I bet some of the Croft family might have them.

“My other idea would be that our children could play us – my daughter Louise is an actress who looks like me, Kim Hartman, who played Helga, her daughter is an actress who looks like her.

REUNITED: The cast back together in their costumes (Image: NC)

“Herr Flick’s two sons are actors too. So they could play us back in the day or we could bring it up to date. I think that could work.

“If we wanted to bring in actors to play Rene and Edith, Jeffrey Holland and Jan Hunt played the roles on stage and they were great.”

Essex-born Vicki also think’s is a shame political correctness and the MeToo movement has made people too scared to flirt.

And she says when she started out as a young actress, plenty of women were happy to use men to get ahead.

She says: “These days you can’t do anything, you can’t put your hand on my knee.